Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 16, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
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Optimism High For NIA Annual Meet Jul. 18-21 ****★*•¥■***★★ * ★ ★ ♦+* Durham To Host 1966 Session N. C. Ushers Association Cfee VOLUME 43 No. 26 DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1966 PRICE 15e Mississippi Freedom Demos To File Suit Against State MISS. GOV. CONFERS WITH REPORTER (Los Angeles)— Governor Paul Johnson of Mis B.C. Burr ell Reelected Pres. NBL At Annual Meet In D.C. Free SSO Cash For Churches Or Auxiliaries Save Purchase Slips From Carolina 0 Times Advertisers RECEIVE SSO EACH MONTH FOR YOUR CHURCH OR CHURCH AUXILIARY The Carolina Times will do nate each month SSO in cash to the Church or church auxiliary in Durham saving from its members and friends the high est number in dollars and cents of cash register receipts or cash purchase slips from advertisers in The Carolina Times listed below: Appliane & TV A&P Stores Alexander Ford Colonial Stores Central Carolina Farmers Clayton Motors Eckerd Drug Stores IBM Frazier Realty Co. Johnson Motor Company Liberal Credit Store Long's Florist Model Laundry Mutual Savings & Loan I Mutual Benefit Life Ins. CJ Mcßrooms Rentals Mebane Lumber Co. Mechanics & Farmers Banß North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company New Method Laundry One Hour Martinizing Providence Loan Co. Rigsbee Tire Sales Rigsbee Motor Co. Roscoe Griffin Shoe Co. Sam's Pawn Shop Sanitary Laundry Union Ins. & Realty Co. WynnDixie Weavers Cleaners, 'TIGER IN TANK' NEW YORK —Cries of 'black power" have put a tiger in the civil rights movement's tank and the result is a threatened explosion within the movement and the entire nation, as well. Everyone was getting into the act. While Dr. Martin Luth er King, Jr., was assailing "black power" advocates as im practical and foolish, Dr. King's own non-violence policy was being attacked. sissippi stops to speak to a I Negro reporter on July 5. Gov ernor Johnson is attending the | MRS. BAILEY Two Noted Beauty Stylists are Slated for Cosmetologists Meet OKALHOMA CITY—Some of the nation's leading cosmetolo gists and beauty stylists will serve as guest instructors when the National Institute of Cos metology holds sessions Aug. 1 through Aug. 5 in Oklahoma City. Included in the group for the third consecutive year arc two noted stylists, Mrs. Versie Lee Bailey of Omaha, Nebras ka and Walter Black, Interna rfiona! stylist of New York City. I The Institute is a project of J r~yßLjr IHS (HKI ■ 1 MAY SSO WINNER—Rev. C. E. McLester and Mrs. Louise Car ter are shown above receiving a check for SSO recently from j Earl Mason, managing edtior of the Carolina Times for the 1 58th Annual National Gov»r nors' Conference. (UPI Telephoto) BLACK the National Beauty Culturists' League, Inc. headed by Dr. Ka tie E. Whickam. ~ The 1966 Institute sessions will be held concurrently for the first time with NBCL's Na tional Convention at the Shera ton-Oklahoma Hotel. Featured courses include Hair Styling and Shaping, Cos j metic Chemistry, Hair Relaxers, | Weaving, Wig-Making, Hair ' Coloring and Comb Curling. BeautV school o'.vners and I See BEAUTY 7A Morehead Ave. Baptist Church, i Morehead Ave. Baptist Church , won the Carolina Times adver tising prize for the month of | May having brought In the j Asks Court To Delay Cut-Off Date For Eligibility to Vote JACKSON, Miss. Lawrence T. Guyot, Chairman of the Mississippi Freedom Demo cratic Party (MFDP), announced this week the filing of a suit by the MFDP against the State of Mississippi. The MFDP is petitioning the U. S. District Court in Jackson to postpone the cut-off date for eligibility to vote in the November gen eral elections. The State law stipulates that a person must be registered at least 120 days prior to elections in order to vote. "In view of the fact that we are conducting an accelerat voter registration drive, we we feel that those who will have been registered this sum mer will be deprived of the right to vote in November. We feel that the elections for con- See DEMOS page 7A League Pledges Pight for Negro Businesses WASHINGTON, D. C —Berk eley G. Burrell, Washington Businessman, has been elected to serve a second term as presi dent of the National Business League. The sixty-six year old organization was founded by Booker T. Washington with the hope that through unity Ne groes could become an integral part of the American Economy. It continues in this tradition. The Nat'l Business League with its sixty-six year history, will continue to fight through its local units all over Ameri ca, for a deeper commitment on the part of the administra tion to lift Negro businessmen from their position of economic obscurity." "It's a natural for the Small Business Administra tion but only a few Negroes can qualify who already have the experience and who could grbw if given financial assist ance. They currently have no program to fit Negroes already in business and this must be changed. PATTERSON CONTINUES AS BOARD CHAIRMAN Frederick D. Patterson, Presi- See LEAGUE 7A | highest number of purchase , slips in dollars *nd cents from | advertisers In the Carolina I Times. (Photo by Nat Purefoy) McKissick to Deliver Speech For Convention Floyd McKissick, national | chairman of CORE, will be the j keynote speaker at the 42nd Annual Session of the Inter- \ denominational Ushers Associa tion of North Carolina to be j held Aug. 25-28 at St. Joseph's AME Church. McKissick will speak at the | evening session of Friday, Aug. 26, at 7:30 The opening session of the | convention will be held Thurs-1 day, Aug. 25, at 12:30 p.m. j •A-ith L. E. Austin, president of l the association, presiding. Pre ceding the opening will, be 30 minutes of devotions led by T. J. Broadnax Thursday afternoon new churches will be registered, i delegates seated, and minutes' read. The supervisors and the! board of trustees will meet also on Thursday. Clyde Moore, president of j the Durham Ushers Union, will! fireside at Thursday's evening session. On Friday morning a tour of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co., building is scheduled, and in | the afternoon the Arts and 1 Crafts and Firit Aid depart- j ments will meet. The Junior Department will open session Saturday a,t 10:15 a.m. with Mrs. S. D. Cates, supervisor of the department, presiding. Ne-.v officers will be elected Saturday, committee reports made, and the report of the treasurer, Burch Coley, will be read. Ending the four-day meet will be a sermon by the Rev. P. R. Cousin, pastor of the host church, at 11 a.m. Sun day. /"* 'f E McKISSICK Dr. Jos. Jones Named Dean St. Augustine's RALEIGH Dr. Prezell R. Robinson, Acting President of Saint Augustine's College, has announced the appointment of several administrative officers. Dr. Joseph Jones, Jr., profes sor and Head of the Biology Department, has been named acting Dean of the College and Professor of Biology. Dr. Jones received the BS. (cum laude) from Morris Brown College, M.Sc. Northwestern University, and the Ph.D. from Ohio State University. He has served as director of three Na tional Science Foundation Insti tutes for elementary teachers, two NSF Institutes for college teachers of science, and was Visiting Consultant, Science Curriculum Improvement Study Project at the University of California at Berkley. In 1960, Dr. Jones was elect ed a member of Sigma Xi Sci entific Honor Society, 1965 ap pointed a Danforth Associate and in 1966, was elected a Fel low of the Ohio Academy of Science He is a vestryman of Saint Augustine's Chapel and a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. MAN CHARGED WITH KILLING SISTER-IN-LAW Latton McCrea was indicted on charges of murder Tuesday following the fatal shooting of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Flor ence McCrea Monday afternoon at 803 Hopkins Street. Mrs. McCrea, 36, of 408 East End Avenue, died Tuesday See MURDBR 7A Bk- WAR TURNCOAT ARRIVES— (San Frenclaco) —Korean War turncoat Clarence Adams ar rived aboard the liner USS President Cleveland here July 45 Companies Expected At Insurance Convention Association To Hold Sessions In NCM New Building The new optimism among Negro-owned life insurance companies is reflected in the theme of the National Insur ance Association's 46th Annual Convention, scheduled for Dur ham, July 18-21. Designs for Success Plan ning, Product, Service, is the word framework against which 350 executives and sales lead ers of 45 companies will share their ideas and expeikenccs, in the four-day meeting. The theme represents a right angle turn from the mood of a decade ago, when the Negro firms were concerned with questions of survival. The mood of uncertainty had been brought on by literally hun dreds of new company forma tions by whites, and a new gen eral policy by major white companies, of accepting Negro risks. The Durham convention will hear a major report by H. A. Gilliam, senior vice president of the highly successful Univer sal Life Insurance Co. of Mem phis, and retiring president of NIA. In addition to Gilliam, the convention will be addressed by Floyd Bragg, vice president of Prudential Life Insurance Co., Burkett Huey, executive See INSURANCE 7A m JOHNSON Man Stabbed To Death By Stepdaughter Willie Johnson, a 54-year-old Durham resident., was stabbed to death here Thursday night about 10:10 p.m. by his step daughter. Margaret Ann Thorn- ! as. 24. during an alleged argil- j ment over the clothes of John- I «on's deceased wife. Miss Thomas used a butcher ; knife to stab Johnson in the | upper right chest at her apart- j ment at 418 1-2 E. Pettigrew | S'.reet according to investigat j ing officers 11. L. Hayes and | T 0. Joyner. Johnson was an nounced dead on arrival at Duke Hospital. Miss Thomas was chSrged with murder following the fatal stabbing. 4. With him ware hi* China** wife Liu Lin-Feng. ion, Lewia, 2 yaari. 9 mot. and daughter, Delia, 7 1/2. The family poiea !1 THE WINNER —"Hi# Mary Van hook, chairman of the Educa tion Committee of the Durham Ushers Union it shown pre senting the winner of the first scholarship ,prize in the Durham i Ushers Union annual oratorical j contest held at Mt. Zoar Baptist Durham Young Woman fo Study in Wales this Summer Miss Noma Alyee Bennett, a June graduate of Hillside High School, will study this summer at the University of Wales, Ban gor, Wales. An honor graduate, Miss Bennett will leave from Kennedy Airport on July 18, for Manchester, England From Manchester she will go to Bangor where,,.she will pursue studies in English Literature and Archaeology, which will include field trips to Neolithic. Bronze- Age and Romantic sites, and a course entitled Britain and America. The program is sponsored by the American Institute for Foreign Study This organiza tion has enrolled more than 3.000 students in its 1960 sum mer school courses at 14 well known European universities. Following the four weeks study period at the University of Wales, Miss Bennett's group will spend two weeks touring Ireland, England and France. She will return to the United States on August 24. Miss Bennett will enter the University of North Carolina at S. C. Pastor Accepts Call to Mt. Bright Baptist Church HILLSBOROUGH— The Rev. Benjamin C. McCaskill, who for the last five years has pastored in S. C., has accepted a call to the pastorate of Mount Bright Baptist Church. Rev. McCaskill was born In i Greenville, S. C., but recently I has been making his home in i Charlotte. He 1* the ion ol aboard tha linar f»r photw grapHora aa th# San Franclac* ikylina cam* into vi»w. (UPI Tolaphoto) J _J_ Church here Sunday, July 10. Miss Washington will represent Durham in the annual oratori cal contest to be conducted »t the annual session of the Inter denominational Ushers Associa tion to be held in Durham Aug ust 25-28. j I MISS BENNETT Greensboro in September where . she plans to majbr In psychol s | ogy preparatory to becoming a* *' Clinical Psychologist. 3 ! She is the daughter of Mr. 5 and Mrs. N. H. Bennett, Jr. of ] 122 Masondale Ave., Durham. lie is vice president and actu e ary of North Carolina Mutual t Life Ins Co. Rev. and Mrs. Boykin McCas kill of Gastonia and was gradu ated from Suller Normal Indus-' trial Institute. He studied also at Belmont Abbey College, Teamer School of Religion, and earned a bachelor's degree at Johnson C. Smith University. A former pastor of churches See PASTOR 7A
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July 16, 1966, edition 1
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